The word 'than' cannot be the subject of a sentence on its own. However, it could form part of a noun phrase that is the subject of a sentence. For example 'Being poorer than a church mouse is not a happy situation.'
Tagalog word for subject = asignatura
Subject is not a word part, it is an entire word.
is the word his a subject
The word "the" is an article, a type of adjective, not a subject.
The matter of the subject was trivial to Steven, he already was smarter than half the class.
No, "wanted" is not a linking verb. It is a verb that shows an action or a desire, rather than connecting the subject to a subject complement.
Another contributor has posted the following answers: "You just used subject in a question! :)Some examples would be: The subject in this sentence is subject. The subject of the topic was Grammar. The subject in the previous sentence was also subject." "Subject" can also be used as a verb: "Subject yourselves to the counsel of those wiser than you."
No- not unless it is in quotes and refers to the word, rather than its meaning. Example. "loyal" is an adjective in the English language. The noun form is loyalty .
A sentence using the word subject: My favorite subject in school was Science.
Are is a linking verb pr an auxilliary verb, depending on it's context in the sentence. If it is standing alone as the only evrb, than it is a linking verb. If it is not the main verb and iis helping the main verb, than it is an auxilliary verb (also known as a helping verb)
Yes, in English grammar, a question word can serve as the subject of a sentence. For example, in the question "Who is coming to the party?" the question word "who" is the subject.
No, the word 'have' is not a subject but a verb.For example,"I have a cat"In the above sentence, 'I' would be the subject and 'have' is the verb.